Title :
Aquarius engineering phase on-orbit TA calibration
Author :
Mims, Amanda ; Ruf, Christopher
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA
Abstract :
Aquarius is a passive microwave radiometer operating at L-band that is designed to measure ocean salinity. Launched in June 2011, the instrument has since been the subject of on-orbit calibration to evaluate its performance and characterize its stability. This study addresses external calibration methods, using observed antenna temperatures to characterize instrument behavior by computing the oceanic global average and vicarious cold statistics. Results indicate that a slow drift in antenna temperature is present throughout the mission, as well as shorter time scale variations. Implementation of a noise diode deflection ratio-based correction algorithm mitigates most of the short term variations but the slow drift remains present in both statistics. It is most apparent using the global average statistic. The drift can be largely removed by adjusting the instrument calibration to force agreement between observed and modeled global averages over long time intervals.
Keywords :
calibration; microwave antennas; microwave measurement; ocean temperature; oceanographic techniques; radiometers; statistical analysis; L-band; antenna temperature; aquarius engineering phase; instrument calibration; noise diode deflection ratio-based correction algorithm; ocean salinity measurement; on-orbit TA calibration; passive microwave radiometer; vicarious cold statistics; Calibration; Hardware; Instruments; Microwave measurements; Microwave radiometry; Noise; Ocean temperature;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS), 2012 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Munich
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1160-1
Electronic_ISBN :
2153-6996
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2012.6350704